|
The British
Malting Industry since 1830
Christine Clark
Malt is the main ingredient in the national
beverage, beer. For centuries the malting industry has provided a principal
bridge between agriculture and the brewing industry, yet its history has
been little studied. The British Malting Industry since 1830 is
the first overall account of malting, dealing with the processes, products
and sales, owners and employees, and with the evolution of what in 1830
were almost all small, local businesses.
Christine Clark traces the influence of the
growing demand for beer in Victorian England, and of the increasing power
of the large breweries, on the malt industry. Maltsters often saw themselves
as the poor cousins of brewers, with whom they had an intimate but ultimately
dependent relationship, yet the fortunes left by leading maltsters shows
the opportunities the industry offered to those able to benefit from technical
innovations and the arrival of the railways. The history of malting in
this century has been one of the concentration of many small businesses
into a few large ones, such as Pauls and ABM. The industry provides a good
example of the benefits and limitations, so typical of British industry,
of family ownership. The modern malt industry has survived a series of
crises and powerful foreign competition to become a significant exporter.
256 pages 30 illus June 1998
1 85285 170 8 £35
|
|